The IOC’s ultimate goal is to protect clean athletes. We are therefore actively committed to fighting all forms of cheating in sport.

The manipulation of sports competitions has become an area of great concern in recent years. Such corruption threatens the very integrity of sport.

Competition manipulation is when an athlete or official cheats in order to remove the unpredictability of a competition. They may cheat to lose a competition or part of it. This is against the Olympic spirit. One example is when athletes lose an event on purpose in order to determine their opponents in the next phases of the competition.

Manipulation of Competition Linked to Betting Activities

Sports betting:Betting on sport is not inherently negative. Sports betting is one way the public can demonstrate its attachment to sports and athletes, and the services offered by regulated national operators are one of the main means of financing sport in many countries.

What are the risks?With the rise of the internet, the sports betting market has gone global. One can bet in Europe on a competition organised in South America through an Asian betting website. The market has hugely increased in size and complexity.

The problem occurs when betting leads to the manipulation of competitions. The very essence of any sporting competition is that the result cannot be known beforehand. When that uncertainty is removed, it renders sport meaningless and demoralises clean athletes.

It is the responsibility of the Olympic Movement and sports world in general therefore to ensure that betting activities do not infringe in any way upon the course or result of the competition.

Cheating is no myth:We have all heard stories about athletes, referees, coaches or others being offered money or advantages in order to manipulate the result or course of a competition. The threat is real and it is poisoning sport in every corner of the world.

Money talks:The amount of money involved can be enormous, making the temptation to manipulate very attractive. The huge sums also attract organised crime.